http://www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2005/04/19/006.html
Tuesday, April 19, 2005. Issue 3149. Page 10.  



Russia's Fascist Present
By Yury Vdovin 


Sixty years ago, on May 9, 1945, Russia rejoiced at the victory over Nazi 
Germany in World War II. I was 7 years old at the time. I remember how people 
came together on that day as they never would again. After the war, the world 
seemed to do everything possible to ensure that the horrors Nazi Germany had 
unleashed on the world would not be repeated. In the name of their fascist 
ideology, the Nazis had systematically murdered 6 million Jews, whom they 
considered an inferior race. Another 54 million people died in the war. 
Unfortunately, mankind will always pay a hideously high price when any one 
nation attempts to assert its superiority over others based on race, religion 
or social status. This is the lesson of history. But have we learned that 
lesson?


On the face of it, there would seem to be no way for fascist ideology to take 
root in Russia. But in the 1970s, it was widely rumored that youth groups 
professing a fascist or quasi-fascist ideology had been rounded up by the 
authorities. Fascist literature and regalia had been confiscated along with 
weapons. According to the rumors -- which have never been confirmed -- the 
children of highly placed party functionaries and of top brass in the KGB and 
the Interior Ministry belonged to these underground fascist organizations. This 
was long before glasnost, of course. The rumors nevertheless received a mixed 
response. On the one hand, people were pleased with the chekists for rounding 
up these groups. On the other hand, they found it difficult to believe that 
such groups could exist in a country that had suffered so terribly from fascism.

Those rumors from the 1970s would have long been forgotten if not for the 
recent surge of xenophobia, racism, religious intolerance and nationalism that 
quickly spilled over into plain old Nazism. 


In the early 1990s, an organization called Pamyat, or Memory, responded to a 
natural desire to restore values lost during the Soviet era with an ideology of 
Russian superiority. Pamyat's ideologues didn't shy away from using terminology 
and regalia -- black shirts and armbands -- based on Nazi models. 


Pamyat eventually disappeared, but it gave rise to hundreds of 
as-yet-uncoordinated fascist, nationalist and xenophobic organizations across 
the country, all claiming to defend Russia against alien elements that are 
ostensibly turning Russians into drunks, swindling them in the marketplace and 
stealing their jobs. 

The authorities traditionally regarded such developments as the work of agents 
of influence and fifth columns. In fact, in times of social and economic 
instability, the regime has always sought to deflect popular discontent by 
blaming the current state of affairs on various enemies.


In recent years, Russia has been gripped by serious socioeconomic instability. 
When the Soviet system collapsed, it left a legacy of empty shelves and a 
socialist economy incapable of meeting the country's basic needs. The constant 
shortage of food, the lack of goods and services, and the terrible living 
conditions in dormitories and communal apartments all reached a breaking point 
in the early 1990s. To get out of this mess, the country needed new leaders 
capable of implementing new ideas. Instead, the old party nomenklatura retained 
control of the country's chief resources and went about reforming them insofar 
as their limited understanding of reform and democracy allowed. As a result, a 
chosen few thrived while most people endured grinding poverty. 


This created an opportunity for Pamyat, the skinheads and faux patriots to 
capitalize on this popular discontent, blaming people's atrocious living 
conditions not on the political leadership, but on oligarchs , merchants and 
minorities. 
At the same time, Russia's "traditional" religions -- which often leave little 
room for Catholics, Protestants, atheists or the non-religious -- began to 
assert themselves. Nationalists of all stripes, intentionally set loose by the 
authorities, have gone to war against anyone they consider "alien." Hundreds of 
newspaper and web sites advocate ridding the country of non-Russians. 
Meanwhile, there are numerous attacks on and killings of non-Russian university 
students, workers and even defenseless young girls. 


Yet the trials of neo-fascist groups drag on for years. Evidence is analyzed by 
expert after expert until one of them finally concludes that the obviously 
inflammatory texts involved do not incite ethnic hatred. Those convicted of 
promoting Nazism, fascism and racial intolerance have even been amnestied in 
connection with Russia's victory over the Nazis.
In the short term, the regime clearly benefits from shifting the blame for the 
country's woes onto "alien" elements. But in the long term, the country as a 
whole suffers as people are made to believe that they are superior to others 
simply because they were born into the right ethnic group. This mindset is 
almost a guarantee of future tragedies.
Newspapers and web sites sow hatred and anger, but the authorities helplessly 
throw up their hands. And we have learned nothing from history. 


To many, fascism seems like a good diversion. Some may secretly share this 
belief in the purity of the Russian people, although the Nazis included the 
Slavs among the inferior races. Our wars of imperialism only add fuel to the 
fire. It wasn't Russia's leaders whose decisions killed and maimed Russian 
soldiers in Afghanistan and Chechnya, so the story goes. It was the Islamists 
and the terrorists. They're to blame when thousands of young men's lives are 
ruined. 

The old nomenklatura who preside over our current distorted prosperity ensure 
that extremists of all stripes go unpunished because they serve the regime's 
purpose: deflecting society's anger about the way they run the country. Is 
there room for fascism in a country that 60 years ago helped to crush fascism 
in Germany, providing all people with the hope of peaceful coexistence?


Yury Vdovin is co-chair of the St. Petersburg branch of the human rights 
organization Citizens' Watch. He contributed this comment to The St. Petersburg 
Times

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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